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1.
An enzyme similar to that described by Smith and Wilcox (15) for Haemophilus influenzae which attacks foreign deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) but not its own has been isolated and purified from H. parainfluenzae. The enzyme degrades foreign DNA to limited sizes and can destroy the transforming activity of H. influenzae and Bacillus subtilis DNA. The enzyme can also destroy the biological activity of H. influenzae phage and prophage DNA. On the other hand, the H. influenzae endodeoxyribonuclease can destroy the transforming activity of H. parainfluenzae DNA but not its own DNA. It also attacks B. subtilis DNA and its transforming activity.  相似文献   

2.
A restriction endonuclease has been partially purified from Haemophilus influenzae Rf232 containing the genetically determined system of restriction and modification of DNA. The enzyme requires ATP for the degradation of transfecting phage DNA.  相似文献   

3.
Competent Haemophilus influenzae Rd recipients, either as phage HP1 restricting (r+) or nonrestricting (r-) nonlysogens or defective lysogens, were exposed to deoxyribonucleic acids from various wild-type phage HP1 lysogenic H. influenzae serotype strains (non-encapsulated derivatives of serotypes a,b, c, d, and e), to DNA from lysogenic Haemophilus parahaemolyticus, and to DNA from modified and nonmodified phage HP1. Transformation of antibiotic resistance markers and of prophage markers in homospecific crosses was observed to be unaffected by the recipient restriction phenotype, whereas the transfection response was much reduced in r+ recipients. Heterospecific transformation of prophage markers was reduced by only 80 to 90%, whereas antibiotic resistance marker transformation was 1,000 to 10,000 times lower. Heterspecific transfection was at least 100 times lower than homospecific transfection in both r+ and r- recipients. The general conclusion is that neither class I nor class II restriction enzymes affect significantly the transformation efficiency in homospecific and heterospecific crosses. The efficiency of heterospecific transformation may depend mainly on the deoxyribonucleic acid homology in the genetic marker region.  相似文献   

4.
Whole phages HP1 and HP3, vegetative-phage deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), and single and tandem double prophage DNA were exposed to ultraviolet radiation and then assayed on a wild-type (DNA repair-proficient) Haemophilus influenzae Rd strain and on a repair-deficient uvr-1 strain. Host cell reactivation (DNA repair) was observed for whole-phage and vegetative-phage DNA but not for single and double prophage DNA. Competent (phage-resistant) Haemophilus parainfluenzae cells were normally transfected with H. influenzae-grown phage DNA and with tandem double prophage DNA but not at all with single prophage DNA. CaCl2-treated H. influenzae suspensions could be transfected with vegetative phage DNA and with double prophage DNA but not with single prophage DNA. These observations support the hypothesis that transfection with single prophage DNA occurs through prophage DNA single-strand insertion into the recipient chromosome (at the bacterial att site) followed by DNA replication and then prophage induction.  相似文献   

5.
Non-modified DNAs from phages SPO2 and phi 105, and prophage DNAs extracted from lysogens carrying these phages, were used to transfect isogenic r+m+ B. subtilis recipients which were either non-lysogenic, or had been lysogenized with a homologous or a non-homologous phage. Restriction of transfecting phage and prophage DNA occurred in non-lysogenic recipients and in recipients lysogenic for a non-homologous phage. No effect of restriction was observed when phage or prophage DNA was used to transfect recipients carrying a homologous prophage. This is analogous to the absence of restriction in transformation and indicates that in B. subtilis the distinction between transforming and transforming and transfecting DNA is not made at the initial stages of DNA uptake and processing, but rather at later stages, where recognition of homologous regions in donor and recipient DNA plays an important role.  相似文献   

6.
The restriction endonucleases of type I and II from Haemophilus influenzae were studied for their activity on transforming and transfecting DNA. Type I restriction enzyme from Haemophilus influenzae Rf, which requires adenosine 5'-triphosphate, reduced the size of unmodified bacterial DNA from 66x106 daltons to approximately 18x106 daltons and did not attack modified DNA. The action of this enzyme gives only a low level of inactivation of single and linked markers in the transforming DNA. In contrast the HP1c1 phage DNA was drastically inactivated by this enzyme. The endoR.Hind III degrades the ummodified bacterial DNA but the segments generated by this enzyme are still capable of being integrated in transformation. The enzyme has no activity on HP1c1 phage DNA.  相似文献   

7.
Two Haemophilus influenzae Rd genes each complemented the pleiotropic defects of the recA-like mutation rec-1. One gene, fec, was isolated on a 3.6-kilobase-pair EcoRI restriction fragment by complementation of the Fec- phenotype of bacteriophage lambda. The other gene, rec, was identified on a 3.1-kilobase-pair EcoRI fragment by Southern hybridization by using recA-like gene probes from Erwinia carotovora and Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO. In a rec-1 strain of H. influenzae, the cloned genes restored resistance to UV irradiation, transformation by chromosomal DNA, and spontaneous release of HP1 prophage to wild-type levels. The fec and rec genes were located on the cloned segments by insertion and deletion mutagenesis and subcloning. The restriction endonuclease cleavage maps of the two DNAs were similar but not identical. Southern hybridization demonstrated that the two EcoRI restriction fragments contained homologous DNA sequences, but a fec gene-specific probe was prepared. Each gene encoded a 38,000-dalton polypeptide.  相似文献   

8.
A type I restriction enzyme from Haemophilus influenzae, Hind I, which requires adenosine 5' -triphosphate and 5-adenosyl methionine, was studied for its activity on transfecting and transforming deoxyribonculeic acid (DNA). The enzyme reduced the size of unmodified bacteriophage S2 DNA from 37 X 10(6) daltons to approximately 10 X 10(6) daltons, but did not affect modified S2 DNA. Unmodified transforming DNA was attacked in vitro by Hind I; however, relatively low levels of inactivation were obtained for single markers, and linked transformants were inactivated as a function of the distance between markers. In contrast, unmodified bacterial DNA was not inactivated in vivo for either single or linked markers by the Hind I restriction system, probably because the segments generated by Hind I were still capable of being integrated in vivo. The lack of preferential inactivation of markers by the enzyme suggests that it makes random breaks in the DNA.  相似文献   

9.
The mom gene of bacteriophage Mu encodes an enzyme that converts adenine to N(6)-(1-acetamido)-adenine in the phage DNA and thereby protects the viral genome from cleavage by a wide variety of restriction endonucleases. Mu-like prophage sequences present in Haemophilus influenzae Rd (FluMu), Neisseria meningitidis type A strain Z2491 (Pnme1) and H. influenzae biotype aegyptius ATCC 11116 do not possess a Mom-encoding gene. Instead, at the position occupied by mom in Mu they carry an unrelated gene that encodes a protein with homology to DNA adenine N(6)-methyltransferases (hin1523, nma1821, hia5, respectively). Products of the hin1523, hia5 and nma1821 genes modify adenine residues to N(6)-methyladenine, both in vitro and in vivo. All of these enzymes catalyzed extensive DNA methylation; most notably the Hia5 protein caused the methylation of 61% of the adenines in λ DNA. Kinetic analysis of oligonucleotide methylation suggests that all adenine residues in DNA, with the possible exception of poly(A)-tracts, constitute substrates for the Hia5 and Hin1523 enzymes. Their potential 'sequence specificity' could be summarized as AB or BA (where B = C, G or T). Plasmid DNA isolated from Escherichia coli cells overexpressing these novel DNA methyltransferases was resistant to cleavage by many restriction enzymes sensitive to adenine methylation.  相似文献   

10.
Rapidly growing Haemophilus influenzae strain Rd bacteria were infected with bacteriophage HP1 and DNA extracts prepared at various times thereafter. A number of phage genes scattered along the entire phage genome were quantitatively assayed by transformation. The kinetics of activity increases of these genes suggests that phage HP1 DNA replication begins at a fixed origin about one-quarter from the right end and that it proceeds to the left.  相似文献   

11.
The resolution of high molecular weight DNA fragments by field-inversion gel electrophoresis (FIGE) demonstrate the presence of two phage (S2 and HP1c1) integration sites (attB) in the Haemophilus influenzae Rd chromosome. In a population of wild-type cells either prophage site appears to be occupied in a single cell by one to at least three, tandemly repeated, amplified phage DNA molecules. The attL of the second bacterial attachment site present in the host SmaI fragment 7 and the leftmost part of phage S2 type B DNA of its genome organization (Piekarowicz et. al., 1986) have been sequenced. A comparison of the two bacterial att sites demonstrated that their homology is limited to the core region. A comparison of the DNA sequences of phage S2 type B and HP1c1 type C revealed a 530-bp insertion in the HP1c1 type C (not present in S2 type B) in addition to DNA variants due mostly to single-base mismatches. We postulate that phage S2 and HP1c1 genome variants (A, B, and C) evolved from a single phage origin and might stem from passage history arisen through accumulation of mutations.  相似文献   

12.
Marker Rescue in Haemophilus influenzae Bacteriophage   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Rescue of wild-type markers from transfecting phage DNA in cómpetent Haemophilus influenzae cells by superinfection with temperature-sensitive phage (marker rescue) is approximately linearly dependent upon the concentration of transfecting DNA. The amount of marker rescue with a constant amount of transfecting DNA increases with increasing multiplicities of superinfecting phage up to about 4, and then decreases at higher multiplicities. Host restriction of transfecting DNA does not affect marker rescue. The frequency of wild-type recombinants from marker rescue is much greater than that from multiple infection with whole phages, and is comparable to that obtained with two mutant-transfecting DNAs. The amount of marker rescue decreases exponentially with time between entrance of the transfecting DNA and superinfection, and the rate of decrease is independent of map position of the rescued marker. Marker rescue is drastically reduced in the recombination-defective strains, rec1 and rec2.  相似文献   

13.
The Escherichia coli CT596 prophage exclusion genes gmrS and gmrD were found to encode a novel type IV modification-dependent restriction nuclease that targets and digests glucosylated (glc)-hydroxymethylcytosine (HMC) DNAs. The protein products GmrS (36 kDa) and GmrD (27 kDa) were purified and found to be inactive separately, but together degraded several different glc-HMC modified DNAs (T4, T2 and T6). The GMR enzyme is able to degrade both alpha-glucosy-HMC T4 DNA and beta-glucosyl-HMC T4 DNA, whereas no activity was observed against non-modified DNAs including unmodified T4 cytosine (C) DNA or non-glucosylated T4 HMC DNA. Enzyme activity requires NTP, favors UTP, is stimulated by calcium, and initially produces 4 kb DNA fragments that are further degraded to low molecular mass products. The enzyme is inhibited by the T4 phage internal protein I* (IPI*) to which it was found to bind. Overall activities of the purified GmrSD enzyme are in good agreement with the properties of the cloned gmr genes in vivo and suggest a restriction enzyme specific for sugar modified HMC DNAs. IPI* thus represents a third generation bacteriophage defense against restriction nucleases of the Gmr type.  相似文献   

14.
The Escherichia coli plasmids pBR322 and pBR327 can be taken up by Haemophilus influenzae but do not replicate in this organism; however, integration of pBR into the H. influenzae chromosome was achieved by ligation to a fragment of the Haemophilus phage S2 that carried a phage attachment site (attP). Once these sequences were integrated, they could serve as sites of recombination and amplification for homologous (pBR or phage) DNA. Amplification appeared to occur in one of two prophage sites (attB) present in the H. influenzae chromosome. The extent of amplification was different in different cells and reflected the ability of these sequences to undergo rearrangement leading to the formation of a DNA ladder. The ladder was obtained by treatment of DNA with restriction enzymes that cut outside of the inserted DNA, i.e., did not cut in the repeat sequence, and represented different numbers of repeat elements. Reversed-field gel electrophoresis was instrumental in resolving amplified structures. Inasmuch as single-cell isolates gave rise to the same ladder structure, it was assumed that amplification was under regulatory control and that it reproduced the same equilibrium of repeat structures. Transformation of E. coli with the amplified H. influenzae DNA resulted in precise excision and replication of the original monomeric plasmids. This excision was independent of the recA and recBC genes.  相似文献   

15.
Mycoplasma bacteriophage L51 single-stranded DNA and L2 double-stranded DNA are host cell modified and restricted when they transfect Acholeplasma laidlawii JA1 and K2 cells. The L51 genome has a single restriction endonuclease MboI site (recognition sequence GATC), which contains 5-methylcytosine when the DNA is isolated from L51 phage grown in K2 cells but is unmethylated when the DNA is from phage grown in JA1 cells. This GATC sequence is nonessential, since an L51 mutant in which the MboI site was deleted was still viable. DNA from this deletion mutant phage was not restricted during transfection of either strain K2 or JA1. Therefore, strain K2 restricts DNA containing the sequence GATC, and strain JA1 restricts DNA containing the sequence GAT 5-methylcytosine. We conclude that K2 cells have a restriction system specific for DNA containing the sequence GATC and protect their DNA by methylating cytosine in this sequence. In contrast, JA1 cells (which contain no methylated DNA bases) have a newly discovered type of restriction-modification system. From results of studies of the restriction of specifically methylated DNAs, we conclude that JA1 cells restrict DNA containing 5-methylcytosine, regardless of the nucleotide sequence containing 5-methylcytosine. This is the first report of a DNA restriction activity specific for a single (methylated) base. Modification in this system is the absence of cytosine methylating activity. A restriction-deficient variant of strain JA1, which retains the JA1 modification phenotype, was isolated, indicating that JA1 cells have a gene product with restriction specificity for DNA containing 5-methylcytosine.  相似文献   

16.
One restriction enzyme map of Staphylococcus aureus bacteriophage phi 11 DNA was established by reciprocal double digestions with the enzymes EcoRI, HaeII, and KpnI. The sequential order of the EcoRI fragments was thereafter established by a novel approach involving blotting of DNA partially cleaved with EcoRI and the probing the blots with nick-translated terminal fragments. A circular map of the phi 11 DNA was established, and the phage genome was circularly permuted based on the failure to end label mature viral DNA, restriction maps of replicating DNA, and finally, homoduplex analysis in the electron microscope. A restriction enzyme map of the prophage form of phi 11 DNA was obtained by analysis of chromosomal DNA from a lysogenic strain.  相似文献   

17.
Specific methylases that have the properties of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) modification enzymes have been isolated from Haemophilus influenzae strain Rd. Two activities ((Methylase IIa and methylase III) were found to protect transforming DNA of H. parainfluenzae from the action of H. influenzae restriction enzymes. To determine the specificty of the protection, a procedure based on biological activity was developed for the separation and purification of the restriction endonucleases from H. influenzae strain Rd. Two endonuclease R activities presumably corresponding to Hind II and Hind III (P. H. Roy and H. O. Smith, 1973; H. O. Smith and K. W. Wilcox, 1970) were characterized by differences in their chromatographic properties, ability to attack T7 DNA, and inactivation of the transforming activity of different markers of H. parainfluenzae DNA. One endonuclease R enzyme (Hind II) attacked T7 DNA and was found to inactivate the dalacin resistance marker (smaller than 0.01% activity remaining) with only a slight effect on the streptomycin resistance marker (83% activity remaining). Methylase IIa treatment protected 40% of the dalacin resistance marker of H. parainfluenzae DNA from inactivation by Hind II. The other restriction activity (Hind III) was inert towards T7 DNA and inactivated the streptomycin resistance marker of H. parainfluenzae DNA (smaller than 0.01% activity remaining) without any effect on the dalacin resistance marker. The methylation of H. parainfluenzae DNA accomplished by methylase III protected 60% of the transforming activity of the streptomycin resistance marker of H. parainfluenzae DNA from the action of Hind III.  相似文献   

18.
Host-controlled restriction and modification of TP-1C phage and infectious phage DNA occurs in Bacillus stearothermophilus and is subject to control by TP-8 or TP-12 prophage.  相似文献   

19.
DNA methylases of Hemophilus influenzae Rd. I. Purification and properties   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
Hemophilus influenzae strain Rd DNA contains small amounts of 5-methylcytosine (0.012%) and significantly greater amounts of N-6-methyladenine (0.34%). Four DNA adenine methylases have been identified and purified from crude extracts of H. influenzae Rd by means of phosphocellulose chromatography. Each of the four enzymes requires (S-adenosyl-l-methionine as a methyl group donor and each differs in its ability to methylate various DNAs in vitro. DNA methylase I is related to the genetically described modification-restriction system in H. influenzae Rd, and is presumably the modification enzyme for that system. DNA methylase II introduces approximately 130 methyl groups into a phage T7 DNA molecule and protects T7 DNA from the H. influenzae Rd restriction enzyme, endonuclease R, described by Smith and Wilcox (1970). These findings indicate that DNA methylase II is the modification enzyme corresponding to endonuclease R. A third modification-restriction system, which does not affect T7 DNA, has been detected in H. influenzae Rd. DNA methylase III is apparently the modification enzyme for this system. The biological function of DNA methylase IV remains unknown.  相似文献   

20.
Competent Bacillus subtilis were investigated for their ability to support the repair of UV-irradiated bacteriophage and bacteriophage DNA. UV-irradiated bacteriophage DNA cannot be repaired to the same level as UV-irradiated bacteriophage, suggesting a deficiency in the ability of competent cells to repair UV damage. However, competent cells were as repair proficient as noncompetent cells in their ability to repair irradiated bacteriophage in marker rescue experiments. The increased sensitivity of irradiated DNA is shown to be due to the inability of excision repair to function on transfecting DNA in competent bacteria. Furthermore, competent cells show no evidence of possessing an inducible BsuR restriction system to complement their inducible BsuR modification enzyme.  相似文献   

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